Player Action Cards Amount Pot Balance
RubixCube Small blind 150.00 150.00 1077.50
sillymunch Big blind 300.00 450.00 1432.50
Your hole cards
A
J
lexiboylex Fold
PokerPicks Fold
RubixCube All-in 1077.50 1527.50 0.00
sillymunch Call 927.50 2455.00 505.00
RubixCube Show
7
4
sillymunch Show
A
J
Comments
Answer: He's stealing blinds...or at least attempting it. Can't really say because you haven't told us the positions but in certain positions if it's been folded round to him, with the blinds and his stack size, you could argue a shove with any 2.
The action is folded around to him. He can't fold since the pot already represents about 40% of his stack. He can't call for 15% of his stack and then fold if you shove (which you should do with any two cards since you have so few chips.
His only option with any two cards in this situation is to shove and pray. If you fold then he increase his stack by 50% without seeing a card and if you call he is likely to have live cards against two probable over cards. Against two overcards he is 35% to win the hand anyway.
Lesson here is don't let yourself get down to 3 big blinds. When you have 12-20 big blinds (3600 - 6000 chips in this example) you shouldn't be limping or flat-calling a pre flop raise. You should be looking for spots when you have good cards and are facing a raise pre-flop. You 3-bet all in while you have fold equity. When you have fewer than 12 big blinds you should be open shoving (going all in pre flop when everyone else in the hand so far has folded) with a fairly wide range (22+, A9o+ A2s+ and any suited connectors) while you still have fold equity. People are only going to call with premium hands generally and you still have reasonable chances if you get it in pre-flop.
Too often in these fast structured sit-and-goes I see players limp-folding hoping to see a cheap flop with mediocre hands like K9 or QT when they have 12 bigs left. Get it all in pre and steal the blinds without seeing any cards. You increase you stack by around 10% just for having some balls
The problem is that when you get down to less than about 7 Big Blinds, the value of your hand becomes almost meaningless. You need to get your chips all-in whenever you have the opportunity to be first into the pot. This is because you still have enough to make other short'ish stacks fold with 7 BB. You can't afford to wait even for suited connecters. 7,2 or 3,2 are good enough just based on the fact that if you get called, you'll probably have live cards. 7,2 against AK or pairs between 22 and 66 is is still 30% to 35% to win.
Your opponent in the small blind has no choice other than to shove, and he'd be pretty happy to see you have AJ. That sounds strange, but as long as you're not holding an overpair he still has a decent chance. You were just unlucky to lose this hand, but you lost this tournament in earlier hands. If you were to listen to Dan Harrington, you let yourself get into "the Dead Zone" by waiting for a good hand for so long.
Keep at it, but in future make your move before you get so low. Hope you have better luck in future.
There's nothing wrong with the way either player played this hand. It's pretty much automatic for both of you. If you'd like to post a more comprehensive overview of the big clash with the AQ v 44 that might be more interesting. Without stack sizes, position, bet sizes, etc. it's impossible to know if you could have done anything differently. That hand sounds like the critical hand for you, so that's the one you need to examine. It might well be that you did nothing wrong and were inevitably going to lose because of the way the cards were dealt. You can't win them all.
why assume he has a queen? The hand posted is standard play in current poker and he is better doing it with them hands as they hold such good value to better hands e.g KQ KJ KT AK AQ AJ AT